Each wing of the Y Container house has access to the outdoors, allowing for natural light and air to permeate every room.

Tonji University is no stranger to the Decathlon — their Bambu House turned a lot of heads last year in Barcelona with an aggressive bamboo façade and structure. This year the team is using common shipping containers to highlight the flexibility in design of the trendy, if not difficult, steel box. The design consists of three pairs placed at 120 degree angles with a roof covering where they meet. Each container stands 9.5 feet tall, 20 feet long and 8 feet wide. The three zones are set up for cooking, living, and sleeping, with a central multifunctional space in the middle. The three outdoor spaces are set up accordingly for private and public functions.

The house is shaded by its 40 panel 8kW solar array, which was donated by Sanyo Electric Co. While the containers may be low tech, the walls use a one-two punch of high tech materials to maintain comfort. Vacuum insulation panels are highly effective and reduce the thickness of the walls. Phase change panels passively help maintain temperatures during the day, reducing the peak cooling load, and therefore energy consumption. Cooling is introduced by a split system, and heat is provided by a large flat solar thermal system that caps one of the home’s sections. The captured energy is used to heat the floor via radiant tube and the domestic hot water. Prevailing breezes can be captured from any direction and vented through the center roof. The team scored their highest in the Comfort Zone category, proving that the Y Container’s cooling and ventilation work quite well.

While the exterior looks great, the inside seems a bit drab with little natural lighting and a sparse interior. However, movable walls add a great level of functionality to the design. The triangular custom designed furniture is another great touch, allowing a single piece to be used for seating, storage or as table. For a target market of a growing young family in the outskirts of Shanghai, the Y Container will be a great fit.

LEAVE A COMMENT

NEW USER

CURRENT USERS LOGIN

1 Comment

eddiephahamaneOctober 17, 2013 at 11:11 am

The best innovations i have ever seen with Ship Containers… The dti in a 4th world country like Lesotho could use this innovations to upgrade where such need is in dire!
Constructing one of this as an exhibition in Lesotho would create an awareness that could never fail its goal…